Alice Bradbridge
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Alice Barnham (''née'' Bradbridge; 7 September 1523 – May 1604) was an English silk merchant, and a leading figure in the London silk trade from the 1560s onward. She is chiefly remembered for commissioning a family portrait in 1557 which is one of the earliest family portraits of English origins.


Biography

Alice, born in
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, Sussex on 7 September 1523. She was one of the youngest of the fourteen children of William Bradbridge (d. 1546), a successful and prosperous mercer, and his wife, Alice. Alice married Francis Barnham (1515/16–1576), a
draper Draper was originally a term for a retailer or wholesaler of cloth that was mainly for clothing. A draper may additionally operate as a cloth merchant or a haberdasher. History Drapers were an important trade guild during the medieval period ...
and a London alderman most likely in the years 1546 or 1547. Francis Barnham owned a house on St Clement's Lane, Eastcheap that been the London residence of the Abbot of Stratford Langthorne. Under the rules of the time Francis as a draper merchant was prohibited from keeping a shop. To circumvent this rule Alice ran the retail branch of the family business and was considered to be a professional silkwoman. Despite being married, she was herself active as a merchant and silkwoman. Silkwomen were permitted to trade in London with financial independence from their husbands, a relaxation of the property laws known as
coverture Coverture was a legal doctrine in English common law under which a married woman's legal existence was considered to be merged with that of her husband. Upon marriage, she had no independent legal existence of her own, in keeping with society's ...
. Her business transactions can be traced in historical documents. Alice Barnham was allowed to access a room for business use at the
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as a "sister" of the company. The couple were successful financially (by 1576 the year that Francis died their income was around £1000 per annum) and rose in society. They were able to make loans which enabled the social ambitions of aristocratic families. Francis was granted a coat of arms in 1561 and the two oldest Barnham sons became country gentlemen. Francis Barnham died in 1576 aged sixty and was buried on 23 May at the parish church of St Clement Eastcheap. His tomb was destroyed in the
Great Fire of London The Great Fire of London was a major conflagration that swept through central London from Sunday 2 September to Wednesday 5 September 1666, gutting the medieval City of London inside the old London Wall, Roman city wall, while also extendi ...
. Alice Barnham died in 1604 and was buried on 14 May. She planned to marry the former
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, Thomas Ramsey, but discontinued the plans. It was said that she objected to Ramsey after he scrutinised her the jointure property left to her by her first husband. Alice Barnham died in May 1604.Tim Stretton, 'Women', Susan Doran & Norman Jones, ''The Elizabethan World'' (Routledge, 2011), p. 336.


Portrait

The family portrait is now exhibited at the
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in Colorado. Prior to its purchase in 1998 it hung in Boughton Monchelsea Place, a Kent country house inherited by Sir Francis Barnham in 1613. The subjects of the painting had been mislabelled as ''Lady Ingram and her Two Boys Martin and Steven'' for many years due to a paper tag placed on the back of the painting in 1660. This attribution probably occurred because of the close family ties between the Ingram and Barnham families. It has now been relabelled ''Alice Barnham and her Sons Martin and Steven (1557)'', because of information contained within ''
trompe-l'œil ; ; ) is an artistic term for the highly realistic optical illusion of three-dimensional space and objects on a Two-dimensional space, two-dimensional surface. , which is most often associated with painting, tricks the viewer into perceiving p ...
'' inscriptions on the painting.


Family

Of their four sons the third Anthony, probably died soon after his baptism on 18 March 1558, the youngest of the four Benedict (baptised 1559), was a very successful London merchant who amassed one of the great city fortunes of the period, his eldest daughter Elizabeth married Lord Audley the future 2nd
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. Martin (died 1610) — a note on the painting says "Martin was born the 26 of March at 9 of the clock before noon in Anno Domini 1548") — became
sheriff of Kent The high sheriff is the oldest secular office under the Crown (prior to 1974 the office previously known as sheriff)."Sheriffs appointed for a county or Greater London shall be known as high sheriffs, and any reference in any enactment or instru ...
in 1598, was knighted in 1603. Steven (died 1608) — a note on the painting says "Steven was born the 21 of July on a Sunday at night and 10 of the clock Anno Domini 1549" — became MP for
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.


Notes


References

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Barnham, Alice 1523 births 1604 deaths Silk merchants 16th-century English businesswomen 16th-century English merchants Silkwomen 17th-century English businesswomen 17th-century English merchants